Biodiversity of Oenological Lactic Acid Bacteria: Species- and Strain-Dependent Plus/Minus Effects on Wine Quality and Safety

Winemaking depends on several elaborate biochemical processes that see as protagonist either yeasts or lactic acid bacteria (LAB) of oenological interest. In particular, LAB have a fundamental role in determining the quality chemical and aromatic properties of wine. They are essential not only for m...

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Main Authors: Vittorio Capozzi, Maria Tufariello, Nicola De Simone, Mariagiovanna Fragasso, Francesco Grieco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Fermentation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2311-5637/7/1/24
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spelling doaj-8e465807902a4a6598a5d0a9750e74902021-02-18T00:01:15ZengMDPI AGFermentation2311-56372021-02-017242410.3390/fermentation7010024Biodiversity of Oenological Lactic Acid Bacteria: Species- and Strain-Dependent Plus/Minus Effects on Wine Quality and SafetyVittorio Capozzi0Maria Tufariello1Nicola De Simone2Mariagiovanna Fragasso3Francesco Grieco4National Research Council—Institute of Sciences of Food Production (ISPA) c/o CS-DAT, Via Michele Protano, 71121 Foggia, ItalyNational Research Council—Institute of Sciences of Food Production (ISPA), Via Prov.le, Lecce-Monteroni, 73100 Lecce, ItalyDepartment of Agriculture, Food, Natural Resources, and Engineering, University of Foggia, 71121 Foggia, ItalyDepartment of Agriculture, Food, Natural Resources, and Engineering, University of Foggia, 71121 Foggia, ItalyNational Research Council—Institute of Sciences of Food Production (ISPA), Via Prov.le, Lecce-Monteroni, 73100 Lecce, ItalyWinemaking depends on several elaborate biochemical processes that see as protagonist either yeasts or lactic acid bacteria (LAB) of oenological interest. In particular, LAB have a fundamental role in determining the quality chemical and aromatic properties of wine. They are essential not only for malic acid conversion, but also for producing several desired by-products due to their important enzymatic activities that can release volatile aromatic compounds during malolactic fermentation (e.g., esters, carbonyl compounds, thiols, monoterpenes). In addition, LAB in oenology can act as bioprotectors and reduce the content of undesired compounds. On the other hand, LAB can affect wine consumers’ health, as they can produce harmful compounds such as biogenic amines and ethyl carbamate under certain conditions during fermentation. Several of these positive and negative properties are species- and strain-dependent characteristics. This review focuses on these aspects, summarising the current state of knowledge on LAB’s oenological diversity, and highlighting their influence on the final product’s quality and safety. All our reported information is of high interest in searching new candidate strains to design starter cultures, microbial resources for traditional/typical products, and green solutions in winemaking. Due to the continuous interest in LAB as oenological bioresources, we also underline the importance of inoculation timing. The considerable variability among LAB species/strains associated with spontaneous consortia and the continuous advances in the characterisation of new species/strains of interest for applications in the wine sector suggest that the exploitation of biodiversity belonging to this heterogeneous group of bacteria is still rising.https://www.mdpi.com/2311-5637/7/1/24malolactic fermentationlactic acid bacteriamalolactic bacteria<i>Oenococcus oeni</i><i>Lactiplantibacillus plantarum</i>wine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vittorio Capozzi
Maria Tufariello
Nicola De Simone
Mariagiovanna Fragasso
Francesco Grieco
spellingShingle Vittorio Capozzi
Maria Tufariello
Nicola De Simone
Mariagiovanna Fragasso
Francesco Grieco
Biodiversity of Oenological Lactic Acid Bacteria: Species- and Strain-Dependent Plus/Minus Effects on Wine Quality and Safety
Fermentation
malolactic fermentation
lactic acid bacteria
malolactic bacteria
<i>Oenococcus oeni</i>
<i>Lactiplantibacillus plantarum</i>
wine
author_facet Vittorio Capozzi
Maria Tufariello
Nicola De Simone
Mariagiovanna Fragasso
Francesco Grieco
author_sort Vittorio Capozzi
title Biodiversity of Oenological Lactic Acid Bacteria: Species- and Strain-Dependent Plus/Minus Effects on Wine Quality and Safety
title_short Biodiversity of Oenological Lactic Acid Bacteria: Species- and Strain-Dependent Plus/Minus Effects on Wine Quality and Safety
title_full Biodiversity of Oenological Lactic Acid Bacteria: Species- and Strain-Dependent Plus/Minus Effects on Wine Quality and Safety
title_fullStr Biodiversity of Oenological Lactic Acid Bacteria: Species- and Strain-Dependent Plus/Minus Effects on Wine Quality and Safety
title_full_unstemmed Biodiversity of Oenological Lactic Acid Bacteria: Species- and Strain-Dependent Plus/Minus Effects on Wine Quality and Safety
title_sort biodiversity of oenological lactic acid bacteria: species- and strain-dependent plus/minus effects on wine quality and safety
publisher MDPI AG
series Fermentation
issn 2311-5637
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Winemaking depends on several elaborate biochemical processes that see as protagonist either yeasts or lactic acid bacteria (LAB) of oenological interest. In particular, LAB have a fundamental role in determining the quality chemical and aromatic properties of wine. They are essential not only for malic acid conversion, but also for producing several desired by-products due to their important enzymatic activities that can release volatile aromatic compounds during malolactic fermentation (e.g., esters, carbonyl compounds, thiols, monoterpenes). In addition, LAB in oenology can act as bioprotectors and reduce the content of undesired compounds. On the other hand, LAB can affect wine consumers’ health, as they can produce harmful compounds such as biogenic amines and ethyl carbamate under certain conditions during fermentation. Several of these positive and negative properties are species- and strain-dependent characteristics. This review focuses on these aspects, summarising the current state of knowledge on LAB’s oenological diversity, and highlighting their influence on the final product’s quality and safety. All our reported information is of high interest in searching new candidate strains to design starter cultures, microbial resources for traditional/typical products, and green solutions in winemaking. Due to the continuous interest in LAB as oenological bioresources, we also underline the importance of inoculation timing. The considerable variability among LAB species/strains associated with spontaneous consortia and the continuous advances in the characterisation of new species/strains of interest for applications in the wine sector suggest that the exploitation of biodiversity belonging to this heterogeneous group of bacteria is still rising.
topic malolactic fermentation
lactic acid bacteria
malolactic bacteria
<i>Oenococcus oeni</i>
<i>Lactiplantibacillus plantarum</i>
wine
url https://www.mdpi.com/2311-5637/7/1/24
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